vein scanner machine helps doctors and nurses improve the success rate of puncture

Release time: 20/11/24

Giving an injection seems to be a very simple action, but it is a challenging thing even for professional medical personnel. Especially when encountering some obese patients with small or fragile blood vessels, venous puncture is even more difficult.

According to statistics, the failure rate of the first attempt of venous puncture is: 10%-20% for adults and 40% for children. And 58% of patients are dissatisfied with the nurse's venous puncture level. Improper venous puncture will not only make patients suffer from the pain of needle puncture many times, but may also cause phlebitis, vascular obstruction or other complications.

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So, is there any way for medical staff to accurately find subcutaneous veins and improve the success rate of venous puncture? Here is a black technology product from home and abroad, vein finding device, which can assist medical staff in accurate needle puncture!

When giving an IV, the general nurse will first use a rubber tube to tie your artery to make the blood vessel stand out.

Even so, sometimes the nurse sister will make the wrong blood vessel. At this time, no matter how unlucky you are, you have to pull out the needle and re-punch.

If you meet a trainee nurse, it is not uncommon to have to give her a few more injections...

In fact, the trainee nurse is more nervous than you when giving injections. She is afraid of meeting these types of patients.

1. Children: Children's blood vessels are very small. And they are very active. Many children have to have their heads injected with intravenous drips, which is heartbreaking to watch.

2. Elderly people with long-term illnesses: Elderly people who often receive intravenous drips will gradually age and thicken their blood vessel walls. Sometimes, even a few injections will not bring back blood.

3. Obese people: The fat layer is too thick, and the blood vessels cannot be seen at all.

But~ now you don't have to worry about this problem! Our vein device can help nurses see the blood vessels clearly, saving you from the pain of "unjust injections" and making the injections done in minutes.

This vein scanner machine is called VeinViewer. To be precise, it should be called "vascular imaging device" or "vascular imaging device", developed by Christie Medical Holdings in Memphis, Tennessee, USA.

VeinViewer can achieve true image output (TrueView) and digital real-time angiography through active vascular image navigation (AVIN). Therefore, medical staff can easily and quickly find hard-to-find veins when injecting, drawing blood, and intravenous treatment with the help of this device, and can meet the requirements of portability and durability to provide patients with efficient medical and health services. With Vein Viewer, both medical staff and yourself can see your blood vessels 15 mm below the skin.

The blood vessels commonly used in clinical practice are generally concentrated 10 mm below the skin. In addition to the surrounding veins and their branches, you can also clearly see the valves of the blood vessels and the flow of blood. With this, medical staff can easily evaluate the most suitable blood vessels for injection, avoid penetration into other parts that are not suitable for contact with drugs, and reduce the chance of complications.

The functional diversity of the VeinViewer series, while maintaining the traditional hospital neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and emergency (ER) applications, its protection areas can be extended to clinics, blood and plasma banks, emergency medical services (EMS), and even home health care.

Our company has launched three vein finders: HF500, HF550, and HF600. These three vein finders are developed using advanced LED cold light source technology to provide a vein transmission observation tool that can be widely used in major medical departments for intravenous injections. The instruments can assist medical staff in quickly and accurately finding and locating veins during venous puncture, especially for infants, obese patients, edema patients, hirsutism patients, and other patients with difficulty locating blood vessels. They help to improve the success rate of venous puncture, reduce patient pain, and improve the doctor-patient relationship.


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